Value investing and growth investing checklist


Assignment:

Overview

For executives and senior management, financial analysis should be an ongoing pursuit of competitive advantage with the analysis of variances used to gauge whether the corporate strategy is working. There is always one more set of data that can be dissected, one more ratio that can be calculated, one more way to look at the competitive landscape and the opportunities/threats the market presents. Some of the best investments and some of the best strategic moves are made by those who pushed a little further and looked for angles that others had missed.

Our final assignment in the course continues to ask you to use judgment in applying what you have learned about financial statement analysis in this and in previous courses. All financial managers and investors (not to mention, students) must operate in the real world of limited time and resources. You are being given the responsibility to make an informed decision about which metrics are most important in analyzing the financial health of Salesforce.com and its potential as an investment opportunity.

Format

This assignment is to be submitted in the form of a letter from an "activist shareholder." Remember, all investors are actually owners of the company. While it is true that most take little to no action in attending annual meetings or exercising voting rights, some investors secure a large ownership stake in the company and use that leverage to attempt to guide the direction of management.

In this assignment, you are taking on the role of an educated investor (which you now are) who owns a "significant" number of shares in Salesforce.com. You are writing an open letter to the Board of Directors with your suggestions for change. The letter may be positive or negative in tone, but the purpose is to highlight key financial data and urge management to take certain actions.

Your letter must clearly state your reasons for reaching out to the Board, your rationale for buying the stock, and your recommendations for changes going forward.

Instructions To prepare for your letter to the Board:

• Read the 2016 Salesforce.com Annual Report section on "Selected Financial Data" and the "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations".

• Refer to "May the Force be With You: Wide-Moat Salesforce.com is the Newest Software Empire" analyst report sections on: "The Economics of SaaS and Salesforce.com's Valuation", and "Appendix" financial data.

• Additional valuation and financial data is available on the Morningstar Web Site.

• You should also use the Financial Statement Analysis Checklist and the Value Investing and Growth Investing Checklist.

In your letter:

1. Begin with a brief recap of your reasons for buying the stock.

• Explain why you consider Salesforce.com to be a value stock or a growth stock. Support your position with reference to at least two categories from the Value Investing Checklist and two categories from the Growth Investing Checklist.

2. Summarize key product-specific metrics (see Morningstar Appendix), noting:

• What the ratios (EPS, EBITDA, ROE, ROIC and RONIC) in the Morningstar and Annual Report show
• What ratios need to improve and why
• What Salesforce.com most profitable products and services are
• Which products or services management should increase or reduce investment in and why (be sure to consider market competition and risk in your comments).

3. Based on what you have learned about economic moats and your analysis of values, growth and profitability of Salesforce.com, conclude your letter with an explanation of your opinion about the company. Is Salesforce.com a "great moat" company, a "good moat" company, or is it time to divest? Why?

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Finance Basics: Value investing and growth investing checklist
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